The Tally Ho Blaine decks tend to get sticky over time.
Is that code for something?
Yeah, it means "DarkDerp spend too much time with his mind in the gutter..."
They were made around the time USPC transitioned from Cincinnati to Erlanger. Many decks of that period had issues. Initially I though it was a shakedown period of the printing press, but I recently learned that it's something more. The Federal Goverment passed regulations forcing playing card manufacturers to use all-recycled paper, vegetable-based inks and starch-based coatings. OK, maybe not those combinations specifically, but they were forced to stop using 100% unrecycled stock, oil-based inks and plastic-based coatings and had to switch to something less toxic and more renewable. They were forced to do some much-needed R&D work to find the right replacement supplies and still make a viable playing card. I'm guessing that Magic Finish is one result of that R&D work.
So in general, custom decks from '09 and early '10 were the "lab rats" USPC used to try and make these supplies work while devising improvements. Some noticed a loss in quality on Rider Backs - again, this is a possible culprit, and the fact that they were having trouble with the normal stock in use at the time (325 g/m
2) on the new presses in Kentucky and stepped down to a slightly lighter stock (300 g/m
2). Sure there are differences, but I consider the current-issue Bicycles to be at least decent in quality - not godsawful, but not their finest work, either.
More to the point, the Blaine Tally-Ho decks were made, I think, during that changeover away from chemical inks and coatings. Back then, you could get a pack to work well for you for a short while, but within a week or two of moderate use, the deck was shot because the cards had developed a much-higher friction co-efficient. The starch coatings became tacky and glue-like, as starch does in foods when not cooked just right.